9 Episodes

  1. Monstrosities and Metamorphosis in More-Than-Human Worlds

    Published: 8/20/2024
  2. Extraordinary Bodies, Disability Justice, and Metamorphosis

    Published: 8/12/2024
  3. Keynote: Time traveling with Gregor Samsa, or what you can do with six legs

    Published: 8/7/2024
  4. CRISPR, Gene Editing, and Metamorphosis

    Published: 7/26/2024
  5. Hunger Artistry: Kafka and the Art of Starvation

    Published: 7/10/2024
  6. ‘Franz Kafka’s ‘Metamorphosis’: Insects and Disgust and Repulsion’

    Published: 6/12/2024
  7. Tuberculosis: vaccines, diagnostics and experience 

    Published: 6/12/2024
  8. Oxford Reads Kafka

    Published: 6/12/2024
  9. 'Kafka's Ape' and 'Words and Music'

    Published: 6/7/2024

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A series of lectures and talks from across the University celebrating the literary works and enduring global legacy of Franz Kafka. 100 years after the death of Franz Kafka (1883-1924), the University of Oxford celebrated the life and work of one of the most influential writers of all time. Since the posthumous publication of his work and ‘rediscovery’ in the middle of the twentieth century, Kafka became a truly global writer who embraced his own multicultural identity. His novels and short stories were translated into multiple languages. His body of work offered profound insights into the human condition, alienation, relationships, and transformation. Oxford is the natural home for a centenary celebration of Franz Kafka: the Bodleian Libraries has the world’s laest Kafka archive; and the University is a leading centre for Kafka studies led by the Oxford Kafka Research Centre. For more approaches to Kafka and 'The Metamorphosis', the ‘Conversations on Kafka’ interviews (https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/series/conversations-kafka) explore race, comedy, dance, ecology, and much more with world experts on the author from different contexts and traditions.